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The Kindled Flame 1835

True West

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March-April 2025

A LONG ROAD TO THE BATTLE AT THE ALAMO

- WILLIAM GRONEMAN III

The Kindled Flame 1835

Mexico had its hands full with Texas—the northern portion of its state Coahuila y Tejas—in 1835. Many Texas citizens wanted separate statehood from Coahuila within the Mexican confederation. This proved a dangerous position, because Texas’s first citizen of colonization, Stephen F. Austin, remained jailed in Mexico since the previous year for urging Texans to begin drawing up plans for separation. The issue also divided Texas. Some sought peaceful existence with the Mexican government. Others pushed for stronger action for statehood. These factions eventually separated into the “Peace” and “War” parties. Mexican President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna centralized his power in 1836 and kept an eye on Texas.

imageStephen F. Austin, still in custody in Mexico, awaited passage of a new amnesty law that would ensure his freedom. He wrote letters to associates assuring them that Texas had friends among Mexican officials. Austin also praised Santa Anna’s friendship toward Texas and felt confident that it would soon become its own state within the confederation.

By the spring of 1835, Jim Bowie had shaken off his lethargy following the death of his wife and resumed his interest in land. The legislature of Monclova, capital of Coahuila y Tejas, appointed Bowie as a commissioner to oversee the distribution of 1,771,200 acres around Nacogdoches, Texas, with the money raised contributing to defense against Indians. Sweetening the deal, 420,660 acres of this land went to him, with other acreage going to his cronies at bargain prices before the land hit the market.

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True West'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

True West

True West

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time to read

3 mins

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time to read

5 mins

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What HISTORY HAS TAUGHT ME

For my money the best Western movie is The Searchers. John Ford's masterpiece perfected nearly everything the genre had been to that point and shaped nearly everything that came after. That is true greatness.

time to read

2 mins

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time to read

8 mins

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time to read

7 mins

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time to read

12 mins

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time to read

2 mins

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Was it liquor or a health tonic?

time to read

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It's True that True is a True Westerner

True that and all crazy true.

time to read

1 min

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THE SEARCHERS

THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN LEGEND

time to read

9 mins

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